by Emma Schubart, spiked
Hamas operatives, Islamic hate preachers and ayatollah fanboys have been welcomed with open arms.
UK home secretary Shabana Mahmood has banned Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West, from Britain, revoking his electronic travel authorisation and declaring his presence ‘not conducive to the public good’. The Wireless Festival he was due to headline this summer has been cancelled.
This is an extraordinary step. The most immediate question it raises is: if the government can bar Kanye West, then why on Earth does it not bar figures who pose a far more direct threat to the UK?
Why not Hasan Ali al-Taraiki, the London-based Bahraini cleric who has attended conferences with senior figures of Hamas and Hezbollah? Taraiki is also a member of the ‘International Union of Resistance Scholars’, an organisation closely aligned with Iran.
Or Muhammad Sawalha? Sawalha was a senior Hamas operative who ran the group’s terrorist operations in the West Bank, yet he has for years lived comfortably in a north London council house after escaping to Britain in the 1990s. American Treasury officials, who have sanctioned Sawalha, have alleged that he continued to work for Hamas and laundered money to support its terrorism after his arrival in the UK.
And how about Zaher Birawi? In January, Birawi was subjected to American sanctions over his ‘secret ties’ with Hamas. He held a leadership role with the Popular Conference for Palestinians Abroad, which is considered to be a front organisation for Hamas.
These are not under-medicated rappers. These are individuals with documented or alleged connections to Hamas – a proscribed terrorist organisation responsible for indiscriminate rape, murder, torture, mutilation and hostage-taking on 7 October 2023.